Article
Details
Citation
Mather G & Sharman RJ (2015) Decision-level adaptation in motion perception. Royal Society Open Science, 2 (12), Art. No.: 150418. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.150418
Abstract
Prolonged exposure to visual stimuli causes a bias in observers' responses to subsequent stimuli. Such adaptation-induced biases are usually explained in terms of changes in the relative activity of sensory neurons in the visual system which respond selectively to the properties of visual stimuli. However, the bias could also be due to a shift in the observer's criterion for selecting one response rather than the alternative; adaptation at the decision level of processing rather than the sensory level. We investigated whether adaptation to implied motion is best attributed to sensory-level or decision-level bias. Three experiments sought to isolate decision factors by changing the nature of the participants' task while keeping the sensory stimulus unchanged. Results showed that adaptation-induced bias in reported stimulus direction only occurred when the participants' task involved a directional judgement, and disappeared when adaptation was measured using a non-directional task (reporting where motion was present in the display, regardless of its direction). We conclude that adaptation to implied motion is due to decision-level bias, and that a propensity towards such biases may be widespread in sensory decision-making.
Keywords
motion adaptation; implied motion; response bias; normalisation
Journal
Royal Society Open Science: Volume 2, Issue 12
Status | Published |
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Funders | Economic and Social Research Council |
Publication date | 02/12/2015 |
Publication date online | 02/12/2015 |
Date accepted by journal | 02/11/2015 |
URL | http://hdl.handle.net/1893/22658 |
Publisher | The Royal Society |
eISSN | 2054-5703 |